English language

How to pronounce bannock in English?

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Type Words
Type of flatbread

Examples of bannock

bannock
Today, many would call the large round cake a bannock, and call the quadrants scones.
From the en.wikipedia.org
I love throwing a large handful into a bannock mix at this time of year.
From the thisisbristol.co.uk
Bannock is a camp-fire flat bread that can be sweet or savoury.
From the thisisbristol.co.uk
My only bread was bannock, or Indian frybread, a frypan full of which I would make every other day.
From the toledoblade.com
The grain is used to make beremeal, used locally in bread, biscuits, and the traditional beremeal bannock.
From the en.wikipedia.org
I've fried up some bannock but I seem to forgotten the tea.
From the en.wikipedia.org
You can also meet local Inuit people over caribou stew and bannock bread and learn about the traditional way of life in the north.
From the telegraph.co.uk
They prepared bannock, beans and bacon, mended clothes, raised children, cleaned, tended the garden, helped at harvest time and nursed everyone back to health.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
  • A flat bread made of oat or barley flour; common in New England and Scotland
  • Bannock is any of a large variety of flat quick breads. The word can also be applied to any large, round article baked or cooked from grain. When a round bannock is cut into wedges, the wedges are often called scones. But in Scotland, the words bannock and scone are often used interchangeably.
  • The Bannock or Banate are a Native American people who traditionally lived in the northern Great Basin in what is now southeastern Oregon and Southern Idaho. They speak the Northern Paiute language and are closely related to the Northern Paiute people. ...
  • (Bannocked) An open cut resulting from any surfing activity.
  • A traditional Scottish griddle cake usually made from barley, oatmeal or wheat flour. The bannock may also refer to a nineteenth century New England cornmeal cake.
  • A Native American group of Northern Paiute speakers who lived in the Snake River plain of the Great Basin. They were buffalo hunters who lived with the Shoshone speakers in peaceful cooperation. During 1867-1868, both groups were moved to the Fort Hall Reservation in Idaho where they live today.
  • A flat bread made of flour, fat, salt, and water; baked in the oven, cooked on a griddle or over a fire.
  • A flat, round cake, similar to an oatcake but thicker and softer - in fact, more like a scone. See also Selkirk bannock.
  • A traditional Scottish cake, sometimes made with yeast, and often baked on a griddle.